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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

familiar theme of catastrophe with the quite separate theme of<br />

precession. On the one hand we have an earthly disaster on a scale that<br />

seems to dwarf even the flood of Noah. On the other we hear that<br />

ominous changes are taking place in the heavens and that the stars,<br />

which have come adrift in the sky, are ‘dropping into the void.’ 3<br />

Such celestial imagery, repeated again and again with only relatively<br />

minor variations in myths from many different parts of the world, belongs<br />

to a category earmarked in Hamlet’s Mill as ‘not mere storytelling of the<br />

kind that comes naturally’. 4 Moreover the Norse traditions that speak of<br />

the monstrous wolf Fenrir, and of the shaking of Yggdrasil, go on to<br />

report the final apocalypse in which the forces of Valhalla issue forth on<br />

the side of ‘order’ to participate in the terrible last battle of the gods—a<br />

battle that will end in apocalyptic destruction:<br />

500 doors and 40 there are<br />

I ween, in Valhalla’s walls;<br />

800 fighters through each door fare,<br />

When to war with the Wolf they go. 5<br />

With a lightness of touch that is almost subliminal, this verse has<br />

encouraged us to count Valhalla’s fighters, thus momentarily obliging us<br />

to focus our attention on their total number (540 x 800 = 432,000). This<br />

total, as we shall see in Chapter Thirty-one is mathematically linked to the<br />

phenomenon of precession. It is, unlikely to have found its way into<br />

Norse mythology by accident, especially in a context that has previously<br />

specified a ‘derangement of the heavens’ severe enough to have caused<br />

the stars to come adrift from their stations in the sky.<br />

To understand what is going on here it is essential to grasp the basic<br />

imagery of the ancient ‘message’ that Santillana and von Dechend claim<br />

to have stumbled upon. This imagery transforms the luminous dome of<br />

the celestial sphere into a vast and intricate piece of machinery. And, like<br />

a millwheel, like a churn, like a whirlpool, like a quern, this machine turns<br />

and turns and turns endlessly (its motions being calibrated all the time by<br />

the sun, which rises first in one constellation of the zodiac, then in<br />

another, and so on all the year round).<br />

The four key points of the year are the spring and summer equinoxes<br />

and the winter and summer solstices. At each point, naturally, the sun is<br />

3 The reader will recall from Chapter Twenty-five how Yggdrasil, the world tree itself, was<br />

not destroyed and how the progenitors of future humanity managed to shelter within its<br />

trunk until a new earth emerged from the ruins of the old. How likely is it to be pure<br />

coincidence that exactly the same strategy was adopted by survivors of the universal<br />

deluge as described in certain Central American myths? Such links and crossovers in<br />

myth between the themes of precession and global catastrophe are extremely common.<br />

4 Hamlet’s Mill, p. 7.<br />

5 Grimnismol 23, the Poetic Edda, p. 93, cited in Death of Gods in Ancient Egypt, p. 199;<br />

Hamlet’s Mill, p. 162; Elsa Brita Titchenell, The Masks of Odin, Theosophical University<br />

Press, Pasadena, 1988, p. 168.<br />

241

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